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Music for 18 Musicians

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Music for 18 Musicians album cover
01
Music for 18 Musicians: Pulses
5:27
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02
Music for 18 Musicians: Section I
3:59
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03
Music for 18 Musicians: Section II
5:13
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04
Music for 18 Musicians: Section IIIA
3:55
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05
Music for 18 Musicians: Section IIIB
3:46
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06
Music for 18 Musicians: Section IV
6:37
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07
Music for 18 Musicians: Section V
6:49
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08
Music for 18 Musicians: Section VI
4:54
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09
Music for 18 Musicians: Section VII
4:19
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10
Music for 18 Musicians: Section VIII
3:35
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11
Music for 18 Musicians: Section IX
5:24
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12
Music for 18 Musicians: Section X
1:51
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13
Music for 18 Musicians: Section XI
5:44
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14
Music for 18 Musicians: Pulses
6:11
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Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 67:44

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eMusic Review 0

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John Schaefer

eMusic Contributor

John Schaefer is the host of WNYC’s innovative music/talk show Soundcheck, which features live performances and interviews with a variety of guests. Schaefer ha...more »

01.11.10
The musical equivalent of a river — but never the same twice
2005 | Label: Nonesuch

Along with Terry Riley's In C and Philip Glass's Einstein On The Beach, Steve Reich's Music for 18 Musicians is usually considered to be one of the watershed moments in late 20th-century composition. A completely personal distillation of Reich's studies of Indonesian gamelan, Ghanaian drumming, the "phase" effects of his early tape pieces, and his own history with Terry Riley's groundbreaking minimalist music, this work is probably cited more than any other by younger composers as an influence and a musical touchstone.

Music for 18 Musicians contains, in its first four minutes, more harmonic movement than Reich had used in all of his earlier works put together. Propulsive and rhythmic, it lays out the harmonic sequence that the subsequent 11 sections will explore, until those harmonies come back together in the reprise that bookends the piece. Built on the sounds of multiple mallet percussion instruments, multiple pianos (used as tuned percussion instruments) and a handful of reeds, strings, and wordless voices, Music for 18 Musicians is the musical equivalent of a river — able to carry you along with its smooth flow, but constantly bubbling and changing under the surface. Never the same river twice, as the saying goes.

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*Not* the original recording, but great anyway

hecker

Contra rjuna, this is not the original recording of "18" (though it's a fine version in its own right). The original recording (which many think is the best, and IMO they have a good case) is by the Steve Reich Ensemble and was released by ECM; unfortunately it is not available on eMusic (at least in the US). This is such a great and influential piece that it's actually worth buying in multiple versions if you can. The GVSU version on eMusic is also nice and I actually prefer it to this one. Also note that this version is the same version included on the Reich box set available on eMusic.

user avatar

the source

rjuna

wonderful original version that resonates much deeper with me than the later Grand Valley U recording. The GVU version is almost painfully sharp in its clarity where the original has a warmer feel to me.

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They Say All Music Guide

After Reich’s initial experiments with phase music, he moved on to exploring pulse — music that had no relation to melody, but would repeat phrases of either one or several notes, increasing then decreasing in volume as long as the musician had the stamina. When repeated with several musicians playing around one key and starting them off at different times, the result was a piece that continuously evolved, sounding like a night drive through a neon city with bright sounds appearing on the horizon, coming closer, then disappearing behind. The original recording in 1978 on ECM records was a major step forward for Reich and legitimized his music beyond the experimentation of such works as “Violin Phase.” Where the phase work felt insular and looped, Music for 18 Musicians stretches as far as the eye can see. The piece was rerecorded in the late ’90s, but this original recording is worth checking out, even more now for the historical value. – Ted Mills

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